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October 31 2018
Recently finished 'America's Most Sustainable Cities and Regions:
Surviving the 21st Century Megatrends'[1] by John W. Day and Charles
Hall.  Day is with the Department of Oceanography and Coastal
Sciences at Louisiana State University; Hall is a Systems Ecologist
with the College of Environmental Science and Forestry at the State
University of New York, and is best known for his development of
the concept of EROI, or energy return on investment.

The book is a fairly easy read and covers several topics pertaining
to assessing the future sustainability of various cities and
mega-regions in the continental US.  Initially, based on the title,
I assumed a comprehensive ranking of most US cities/regions but
this is not the focus of the book.  Instead the authors selected
about 10 cities/regions which they felt were generally representative
of the various ways the US was settled, how that settlement evolved
starting with their initial natural assets and later non-renewable
fossil inputs, and what the future tends look like with respect to
climate change and fossil energy depletion.  In several cases the
assessments start with the original indigenous populations, their
population estimates and how they lived.  As one might imagine, the
areas East of the Mississippi were, and in may cases still are,
much more productive lands and the native populations reflected
this, both in numbers and variety of ways of living.

Also unsurprisingly, the European settlement patterns largely
followed similar valuations of the natural environments; areas with
ample forests, navigable waters, and good soils were most desirable
and explains the current densities of population along the Eastern
seaboard, Great Lakes region and Gulf coast with the exception of
Florida whose attraction as a retirement and entertainment destination
had to wait for the "era of happy motoring" that cheap oil ushered
in.  Similarly with Las Vegas, another selected city.  Las Vegas
and much of the rest of the American Southwest didn't boom until
the massive waterworks could be built which wouldn't have happened
without cheap fossil fuels.  The narrow green zone that runs from
northern California to the Pacific Northwest didn't see many Europeans
until the 1800's but other than patterns formed by the gold rushes
the settlements followed a similar pattern as the Eastern US with
respect to proximity to forests, good soils and navigable waters.

Which brings us to the present situation.  Pretty much all the
coastal areas will be affected by climate change, either from
increased flooding, storm surges, and bigger more frequent hurricanes.
On top of that, the population density, particularly in the
Mid-Atlantic region, requires dealing with sizable inputs (food,
energy, manufactured goods) and outputs (wastes of all kinds) which
in the absence of cheap liquid fuels will be harder to meet and
invariably more expensive.  Although the regional soils were once
rich in many cases they have been either previously depleted or
simply paved over.  Cities like New York and Miami will be particularly
impacted.

Most of the American Southwest will become increasingly arid and
unable to support the masses that currently reside there.  Lack of
water combined with oppressive heat and urban sprawl will be pretty
much impossible to overcome and these areas will simply have to
depopulate.

Northern California and the Pacific Northwest will fair better, at
least those areas that aren't overly urbanized.  The mega-region
that spreads out from Portland and Seattle will not be anywhere as
sustainable as their promoters make them out to be; as with any
dense urban area, the shear volume of inputs and resulting wastes
is their weakness.  Anyone who has been to this area knows how
car-centric it is; other than in the wealthy close-in neighborhoods
a car is a necessity.  In addition, much good farmland has been
converted into suburban housing so localizing food sources will be
a challenge.

As one might have already gleaned, the cities and regions that have
the best prospects tend to be smaller and more rural and in close
proximity to good soils and water sources.  Cedar Rapids, Iowa is
held up as an example.  Detroit many also be viewed as an "early
adapter" in the number of urban farms that have sprung up among the
former auto factory sites.  Both Detroit and Cedar Rapids are also
expected to see fairly benign climatic changes which invariably
bodes well for them.

For anybody not wedded to their current locale and wishing to
relocate somewhere more likely sustainable down the road this book
is well worth your time.  It also contains many helpful graphs and
maps relating to rainfall, soil quality, world energy flows, etc.


[1] https://www.springer.com/us/book/9781493932429